Planet formation signposts: observability of circumplanetary disks via gas kinematics
Sebastian Perez, Alex Dunhill, Simon Casassus, Pablo Roman, Judit, Szul\'agyi, Christian Flores, Sebastian Marino, Matias Montesinos

TL;DR
This study investigates the potential to detect circumplanetary disks around forming planets using ALMA by analyzing gas kinematics in hydrodynamic simulations, identifying observable signposts in velocity patterns.
Contribution
It provides the first detailed predictions of gas kinematic signatures of CPDs in ALMA observations based on 3D hydrodynamic and radiative transfer simulations.
Findings
CPDs cause distinct velocity signposts in gas kinematics.
Detectability of CPDs is feasible with ALMA Cycle 3 capabilities.
Simulations tailored for HD 100546 show promising detection prospects.
Abstract
The identification of on-going planet formation requires the finest angular resolutions and deepest sensitivities in observations inspired by state-of-the-art numerical simulations. Hydrodynamic simulations of planet-disk interactions predict the formation of circumplanetary disks (CPDs) around accreting planetary cores. These CPDs have eluded unequivocal detection -their identification requires predictions in CPD tracers. In this work, we aim to assess the observability of embedded CPDs with ALMA as features imprinted in the gas kinematics. We use 3D Smooth Particle Hydrodynamic (SPH) simulations of CPDs around 1 and 5 M_Jup planets at large stellocentric radii, in locally isothermal and adiabatic disks. The simulations are then connected with 3D radiative transfer for predictions in CO isotopologues. Observability is assessed by corrupting with realistic long baseline phase noise…
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